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Beautiful Mount Lowe Invites You Up Saturday
r(>G South
California
VOLUME IV
—
----
Beautiful Mount Lowe Invites You Up Saturday
Los Angeles, California, Tuesday, July 14, 1925
NUMBER 5
INVESTIGATOR IN LANGUAGESTUDY SPEAKS THURSDAY
Mount Lowe Trip Diversion METROPOLITAN From Summer Session Work OFFERS DOMESTIC
WORK AUGUST 10
Professor Coleman to Present Aims, Scope, and Results of Language Study
Beautiful Trails, Extensive Views Will Make Mountain Excursion Memorable Feature of Summer; Tickets Now on Sale at Associated Students’ Store
Here is a sure antidote for that insidious mid-summer boredom which is so hard to resist at this time of the year. If you have to BOVARD AUDITORIl_J 1VI P11H'h yourself continually in order to ke^p awake through a lecture,
and find your mind wandering off into shady nooks and mountain trails thick-carpeted with pine needles, instead of learning why is the Gulf Stream or in what year the War of 1812 occurred, then it is absolutely essential for your own salvation that you.get into your hiking clothes next Saturday and go along on the annual summer session picnic to Mt. Lo,we. With John Muir we say: “Climb the mountains and get their good tidings. Nature’s peace will flow into you as sunshine flows into trees, the winds will blow their own
°freshness into you and the storms
Will Show Findings of Impor tance to Educators Interested In Modern Languages
Every teacher, supervisor, or principal, who in any way comes in contact with the teaching of modern foreign languages, will be vitally interested in the visit of Professor Algernon Coleman, special investigator of the Modern Foreign Language Study, to the University of Southern California this week. Professor Coleman who speaks under the auspices of the American Council of Education, will present the aims, scope, and present results of the study throughout the United States. His findings are of importance not only to teachers of language, but especially to supervisors, principals, as well as to those wrho, for any reason, may be opposed to the teaching of languages.
It is expected that arrangements can be made to have Professor Coleman speak at ten o’clock on Thursday morning. In order to accomodate the large number who will wish to hear him, the meeting will be held in the auditorium. Students of the Summer Session are urged to extend an invitation to their friends to hear Professor Coleman.
A. M. HARRIS OF
T
SPELLING EXAM THURSDAY
The only spelling examination of the Summer Session will be given next Thursday morning at eleven o'clock in room S. 355 by Dr. Mildred C. Struble of the English department. All students deficient in spelling should report at this time, bringing with them the examination blue books. No fee will be charged for those taking the test for the first time, but those who have already taken it before must bring the slip from the treasurer's office showing that the special examination fee has been paid.
L
TALKJN«. S. A.
Lecturer and Writer gives Speech On American Viewpoint at Today’s Assembly
WAS AT TEXAS, BERKELEY
Several U. S. C. Professors have Studied Under School of Expression Head
“Good Old U. S. A.” will be the topic of the talk Professor Albert Mason Harris of Venderbilt University who is to be the chapel speaker this morning. The object of his speech will be to make his hearers proud of the fact that tfiey are American citizens and to arouse them to consecrate their lives to the remedy of existing evils.
Professor Harris has been associated in his summer work with several prominent universities, including the University of California at Berkeley and the University of Tfcxas. He taught at Berkeley at the summer session two years ago. Professor Harris was employed in Y. M. C. A. work on the
Pacific Coast during the summer of 1817 and 1918, and is one of the regular lecturers and entertainers on the program of the Pacific Palisades, where he is appearing several times during the session there.
HAS WRITTEN MUCH He is the author of several books and magazine articles. The coming out (CONTINUED ON PAGE TWO)
their energy, while cares drop off like Autumn leaves.” MOUNTAIN PLAGROUND “Mile high Mt. Lowe” is one of the most scenic mountain playgrounds of Southern California. Many thousands of tourists each year make the ascent in order to enjoy its many varied scenes of beauty and its rugged grandeur. The Tavern is the center of amusement. Here are found a ballroom, billiard-room, dining-room, tennis courts and other attractions. Radiating from the Tavern in all directions are a number of beautiful well-laid out trails, which entice the hiker through ft fairyland of mountain beauty.
CAN HIKE OR RIDE PONY
The Tavern is twelve hundred and thirty feet below the summit of the mountain, which is reached by a well-worn trail. For those who do not desire the strenuous execise of hiking, a pony train, in charge of a competent guide, is provided, making regular trips from the Tavern to the Summit in about two and one-half hours. The (CONTINUED ON PAGE FOUR)
Millinery Teachers to Receive Training in Actual Work of Hat Making
LYON TO BE INSTRUCTOR
DR. CLARENCE M. CASE IN LECTURE COURSE
U. S. C. Ethnologist Gives Series of Six at Pacific Palisades
Author of ‘Modern Millinery’ will Use Exclusive Charts in Giving Course
Teachers of home economics and domestic science and head milliners are the two groups for whom a Post-Summer-Session course in Millinery-Trade Design ha-s been planned and scheduled at Metropolitan College, University of Southern California, both as to time and content.
Vocational teachers who are called upon to teach millinery often find themselves handicapped because of their lack of actual hat-making experience, and these will find in this college course instruction in preparing, making, copying, trimming, and designing modern headgear.
Head milliners, or those who wish to become head milliners, will find this concentrated, intensive course planned to supply them with methods of teaching millinery which will aid them in supervising the worq of their subordinates or asssistants.
BY MISS HESTER LYON
Scheduled to be held during the summer vacation season, beginning August 10, five afternoons a week from 2 P. M. to 3:10 P. M., this course in Millinery, coordinating methods of leaching ad trade design, is to be given by Hester B. Lyon, former instructor at Pratt Institute, New York City, and author of “Modern Millinery,” used as a text throughout the country, at Metopolitan College, U. S.
FOLK DANCE WORK IS SUBJECT FOR MISS BURCHENAL
Chairman of American Folk Society and U. S. C. Summer Faculty Member to Speak
DANCES WILL BE GIVEN
Dr. Alice Goetz and Miss Burch-enal Have Friendship of Long Standing
Miss Elizabeth Burchenal, who is Chairman of the American Folk Dance Society, and a member of the Summer Session faculty of the University of Southern California, giving advanced courses in Folk Dancing under the department of Physical Education, will give a lecture in the regular Thursday lecture series in H. 200 at 4 o’clock, on Thursday, July 16. Her subject will be, “Adventures in Folk Dance Collecting,” and the lecture will be followed by a demonstration of oik dancing. This lecture should be very interesting not only to the Physical Education students, but to all summer students.
Dr. Alice A. Goetz of the reguiar faculty has been acquainted with Miss Burchenal for a long time, and speaks very highly of her. The acquaintance and friendship began in the summer of 1905, when these two fenced alone in an exhibition of advanced fencing in the gymnasium at Harvard University. After that, they met again at the Chalif School of Russian Dancing in New York, and at various other places during the summer sessions. Dr. Goetz and Miss BurchenaJ both are, graduates of the Sargent Normal School of Physical Education.
LIKES WORK
Miss Burchenal’s work is characterized by her enthusiasm and love for
Students Lose Everything From Time To Toothpicks
Furs, Wrenches, Vanities are Among Articles Lost in Summer Session but Unclaimed by Owners at Superintendent’s Office; No Books are Lost
That women lose more articles than men, and that Summer Session students are as careless at misplacing their belongings as those in the regular session, seem to be justifiable conclusions from the stock in trade accumulating in the Lost and Found department of the Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds, Mr. Curtis F. Huse. Students lose everything from second-hand toothpicks to sets of furs, and, while the latter are generally claimed, there are at present furs on hands which have been lost in the Summer Session but not yet called for by their owrners.
Although most of the articles are feminine in nature, a Ford automobile wrench recently acquired by the department seems to point to masculine forgetfulness. The person claiming this wrench
"will be asked to give a five-minute demonstration of strong language to prove that he has really used the implement.
CLING TO BOOKS While they lose other things as frequently as students during the other part of the school year, the members of the Summer Session student body do not, those in the office say, misplace their textbooks. As for the regular session student, a textbook on the river's brim a measley textbook is to him and nothing more, but not so with the members of the U. S. C. Summer Session. The treas-use chests of knowledge acquired so dearly at the students store must be kept safe from hazard; and kept safe they are. If you lose a book this summer, know that you are a freak of na-(CONTINUED ON PAGE TWO)
IOWA BOTANIST WILL WORK HERE
Dr. Robert B. Wylie, head of the Department of Botany, University of Iowa, will be a visitor to the University of Southern California this summer, in order to engage in research on the wound responses of native and introduced evergreens of Southern California in the laboratories of the Botany Division of the Department of Biology.
Professor Harris on “Good Old U. S. A.” in Assembly this mornig.
Miss Elizabeth Burchenal will lecture Thursday afternoon at 4 o’clock, H. 206.
Announcement has been made of a lecture course along sociological lines to be delivered by Dr. Clarence Marsh Case at the Pacific Palisades. The course includes six definite subjects, which are: I. The Meaning of Race; II. The Significance of Culture; III. Race and Culture; IX. Social Evolu-lution and World Evolution; V. Race Prejudice and Internationalistic Antagonism; VI. The International Mind.
Dr. Case has given these lectures in Pasadena and elsewhere in Southern California. He is an authority along ethnological lines and his work in this connection has been recognized in several foreign lands, as well as in America. He spoke recently at Fullerton Junior College, giving the Com mencement Address, on the topic “Human Nature.”
C., in the I ransportation Building, Se\- ^er work jn or(jer to collect material
enth and Los Angeles Streets.
for her books on folk dancing, she has
'Miss Lyon will use during the course (jQne manner of things.. She went
exclusive charts and pictures procured by her personally in Europe, and another interesting feature planned is the exhibit and discussion of period headgear and millinery, showing the adaptation of period headdresses to modern equipments and variations of the mode.
at one time down to the Lower East Side of New York, living among the people, and collecting folk dances and manners, customs, and traditions at first hand, by actually seeing them as they occur in the old country.
Miss Burchenal has held several po-(CONTINUED ON PAGE FOUR)
I ATTEND Al TOMORROW’S PICNIC
Education Department Gives Steak Dinner at Topanga Canyon in Afternoon
Leaving for the wilds of Topanga Canyon tomorrow afternoon, the Education Department Summer Session Picnic invites all men students of the university to join a pleasant afternoon outing. Those wishing to go are asked to sign up in the office of the Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds, main lobby of the Administration Building, and to indicate whether or not they have cars. Automobiles will leave at two, three, and four o’clock tomorrow afternoon.
Among the day’s attractions will be a steak dinner. William J. Klopp, instructor in Education, guarantees that the steaq will be at least three inches thick.
Sociology Journal Offers
Important Contributions
M. C. Elmer, Charles Ellwood, and Ellsworth Fans Appear in U. S.
C. Department Publication; Changing Child Behavior by Direct Method Discussed by Clinic Experts
“Changing the Child’s Behavior by Direct Methods” is one of the most important articles in the July-August issue of the Journal of Applied Sociology which is just off the press. It is written by Dr. Phyllis Blanchard and Dr. Richard H. Paynter, two eminent psychologists, who have based their findings upon studies made in Los Angeles wrhile members of the staff of the Child Guidance clinic last year. Professor Charles A. EUw'ood who was a member of the Suuumer Session faculty at U. S. C. a year ago, discusses the increasing role which the group is playing in society. He points out the danger of group egoism and excessive group patriotism.
Dr. M. C. Elmer, Visiting Professor in Sociology this summer, writes on, “The Random Sample,” and indicates some weaknesses in the use of sampling as statistical measure. Dr. Ellsworth Fans of the University of Chicago, an° outstanding social psychologist of the country, analyzes “The Nature of Social Attitudes” and throw s new light upon this basic phase of human life. In an article entitled, “Child Labor Research,” Mr. Raymond G. Fuller of Boston explains the recent reaction against the proposed child labor amendment to the Constitution, and urges that all friends of the child study the facts regarding child labor in a more fundamental way than they have done heretofore. He feels that in the past there has been too little of research and too much propaganda regarding child labor.
SHOW ATTITUDE CHANGE Dr. and Mrs. Earle F. Young have collaborated in a description of a sudden change in the social attitudes of (CONTINUED ON b*AGE THREE)
TWO CORRECTIONS
The Trojan wishes to make two corrections in the article printed Friday dealing with visiting Professor J. Duncan Spaeth of Princeton and Dr. James Main Dixon, head of the Comparative Literature department. The name of John Duncan, Dt. Spaeth’s grandfather, was inadvertently printed as James Duncan, while the Duke of Ar-gyle was the classmate of Dr. Dixon's father, and not, as the article stated, of Dr. Duncan’s.
WATCH FOR APPOINTMENTS Those registered with the Appointment Office of the University are asked by Miss Edith Weir. Appointment Secretary, to watch the bulletin board of the office quite frequently. It is located in the Old College near the south entrance.

Beautiful Mount Lowe Invites You Up Saturday
r(>G South
California
VOLUME IV
—
----
Beautiful Mount Lowe Invites You Up Saturday
Los Angeles, California, Tuesday, July 14, 1925
NUMBER 5
INVESTIGATOR IN LANGUAGESTUDY SPEAKS THURSDAY
Mount Lowe Trip Diversion METROPOLITAN From Summer Session Work OFFERS DOMESTIC
WORK AUGUST 10
Professor Coleman to Present Aims, Scope, and Results of Language Study
Beautiful Trails, Extensive Views Will Make Mountain Excursion Memorable Feature of Summer; Tickets Now on Sale at Associated Students’ Store
Here is a sure antidote for that insidious mid-summer boredom which is so hard to resist at this time of the year. If you have to BOVARD AUDITORIl_J 1VI P11H'h yourself continually in order to ke^p awake through a lecture,
and find your mind wandering off into shady nooks and mountain trails thick-carpeted with pine needles, instead of learning why is the Gulf Stream or in what year the War of 1812 occurred, then it is absolutely essential for your own salvation that you.get into your hiking clothes next Saturday and go along on the annual summer session picnic to Mt. Lo,we. With John Muir we say: “Climb the mountains and get their good tidings. Nature’s peace will flow into you as sunshine flows into trees, the winds will blow their own
°freshness into you and the storms
Will Show Findings of Impor tance to Educators Interested In Modern Languages
Every teacher, supervisor, or principal, who in any way comes in contact with the teaching of modern foreign languages, will be vitally interested in the visit of Professor Algernon Coleman, special investigator of the Modern Foreign Language Study, to the University of Southern California this week. Professor Coleman who speaks under the auspices of the American Council of Education, will present the aims, scope, and present results of the study throughout the United States. His findings are of importance not only to teachers of language, but especially to supervisors, principals, as well as to those wrho, for any reason, may be opposed to the teaching of languages.
It is expected that arrangements can be made to have Professor Coleman speak at ten o’clock on Thursday morning. In order to accomodate the large number who will wish to hear him, the meeting will be held in the auditorium. Students of the Summer Session are urged to extend an invitation to their friends to hear Professor Coleman.
A. M. HARRIS OF
T
SPELLING EXAM THURSDAY
The only spelling examination of the Summer Session will be given next Thursday morning at eleven o'clock in room S. 355 by Dr. Mildred C. Struble of the English department. All students deficient in spelling should report at this time, bringing with them the examination blue books. No fee will be charged for those taking the test for the first time, but those who have already taken it before must bring the slip from the treasurer's office showing that the special examination fee has been paid.
L
TALKJN«. S. A.
Lecturer and Writer gives Speech On American Viewpoint at Today’s Assembly
WAS AT TEXAS, BERKELEY
Several U. S. C. Professors have Studied Under School of Expression Head
“Good Old U. S. A.” will be the topic of the talk Professor Albert Mason Harris of Venderbilt University who is to be the chapel speaker this morning. The object of his speech will be to make his hearers proud of the fact that tfiey are American citizens and to arouse them to consecrate their lives to the remedy of existing evils.
Professor Harris has been associated in his summer work with several prominent universities, including the University of California at Berkeley and the University of Tfcxas. He taught at Berkeley at the summer session two years ago. Professor Harris was employed in Y. M. C. A. work on the
Pacific Coast during the summer of 1817 and 1918, and is one of the regular lecturers and entertainers on the program of the Pacific Palisades, where he is appearing several times during the session there.
HAS WRITTEN MUCH He is the author of several books and magazine articles. The coming out (CONTINUED ON PAGE TWO)
their energy, while cares drop off like Autumn leaves.” MOUNTAIN PLAGROUND “Mile high Mt. Lowe” is one of the most scenic mountain playgrounds of Southern California. Many thousands of tourists each year make the ascent in order to enjoy its many varied scenes of beauty and its rugged grandeur. The Tavern is the center of amusement. Here are found a ballroom, billiard-room, dining-room, tennis courts and other attractions. Radiating from the Tavern in all directions are a number of beautiful well-laid out trails, which entice the hiker through ft fairyland of mountain beauty.
CAN HIKE OR RIDE PONY
The Tavern is twelve hundred and thirty feet below the summit of the mountain, which is reached by a well-worn trail. For those who do not desire the strenuous execise of hiking, a pony train, in charge of a competent guide, is provided, making regular trips from the Tavern to the Summit in about two and one-half hours. The (CONTINUED ON PAGE FOUR)
Millinery Teachers to Receive Training in Actual Work of Hat Making
LYON TO BE INSTRUCTOR
DR. CLARENCE M. CASE IN LECTURE COURSE
U. S. C. Ethnologist Gives Series of Six at Pacific Palisades
Author of ‘Modern Millinery’ will Use Exclusive Charts in Giving Course
Teachers of home economics and domestic science and head milliners are the two groups for whom a Post-Summer-Session course in Millinery-Trade Design ha-s been planned and scheduled at Metropolitan College, University of Southern California, both as to time and content.
Vocational teachers who are called upon to teach millinery often find themselves handicapped because of their lack of actual hat-making experience, and these will find in this college course instruction in preparing, making, copying, trimming, and designing modern headgear.
Head milliners, or those who wish to become head milliners, will find this concentrated, intensive course planned to supply them with methods of teaching millinery which will aid them in supervising the worq of their subordinates or asssistants.
BY MISS HESTER LYON
Scheduled to be held during the summer vacation season, beginning August 10, five afternoons a week from 2 P. M. to 3:10 P. M., this course in Millinery, coordinating methods of leaching ad trade design, is to be given by Hester B. Lyon, former instructor at Pratt Institute, New York City, and author of “Modern Millinery,” used as a text throughout the country, at Metopolitan College, U. S.
FOLK DANCE WORK IS SUBJECT FOR MISS BURCHENAL
Chairman of American Folk Society and U. S. C. Summer Faculty Member to Speak
DANCES WILL BE GIVEN
Dr. Alice Goetz and Miss Burch-enal Have Friendship of Long Standing
Miss Elizabeth Burchenal, who is Chairman of the American Folk Dance Society, and a member of the Summer Session faculty of the University of Southern California, giving advanced courses in Folk Dancing under the department of Physical Education, will give a lecture in the regular Thursday lecture series in H. 200 at 4 o’clock, on Thursday, July 16. Her subject will be, “Adventures in Folk Dance Collecting,” and the lecture will be followed by a demonstration of oik dancing. This lecture should be very interesting not only to the Physical Education students, but to all summer students.
Dr. Alice A. Goetz of the reguiar faculty has been acquainted with Miss Burchenal for a long time, and speaks very highly of her. The acquaintance and friendship began in the summer of 1905, when these two fenced alone in an exhibition of advanced fencing in the gymnasium at Harvard University. After that, they met again at the Chalif School of Russian Dancing in New York, and at various other places during the summer sessions. Dr. Goetz and Miss BurchenaJ both are, graduates of the Sargent Normal School of Physical Education.
LIKES WORK
Miss Burchenal’s work is characterized by her enthusiasm and love for
Students Lose Everything From Time To Toothpicks
Furs, Wrenches, Vanities are Among Articles Lost in Summer Session but Unclaimed by Owners at Superintendent’s Office; No Books are Lost
That women lose more articles than men, and that Summer Session students are as careless at misplacing their belongings as those in the regular session, seem to be justifiable conclusions from the stock in trade accumulating in the Lost and Found department of the Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds, Mr. Curtis F. Huse. Students lose everything from second-hand toothpicks to sets of furs, and, while the latter are generally claimed, there are at present furs on hands which have been lost in the Summer Session but not yet called for by their owrners.
Although most of the articles are feminine in nature, a Ford automobile wrench recently acquired by the department seems to point to masculine forgetfulness. The person claiming this wrench
"will be asked to give a five-minute demonstration of strong language to prove that he has really used the implement.
CLING TO BOOKS While they lose other things as frequently as students during the other part of the school year, the members of the Summer Session student body do not, those in the office say, misplace their textbooks. As for the regular session student, a textbook on the river's brim a measley textbook is to him and nothing more, but not so with the members of the U. S. C. Summer Session. The treas-use chests of knowledge acquired so dearly at the students store must be kept safe from hazard; and kept safe they are. If you lose a book this summer, know that you are a freak of na-(CONTINUED ON PAGE TWO)
IOWA BOTANIST WILL WORK HERE
Dr. Robert B. Wylie, head of the Department of Botany, University of Iowa, will be a visitor to the University of Southern California this summer, in order to engage in research on the wound responses of native and introduced evergreens of Southern California in the laboratories of the Botany Division of the Department of Biology.
Professor Harris on “Good Old U. S. A.” in Assembly this mornig.
Miss Elizabeth Burchenal will lecture Thursday afternoon at 4 o’clock, H. 206.
Announcement has been made of a lecture course along sociological lines to be delivered by Dr. Clarence Marsh Case at the Pacific Palisades. The course includes six definite subjects, which are: I. The Meaning of Race; II. The Significance of Culture; III. Race and Culture; IX. Social Evolu-lution and World Evolution; V. Race Prejudice and Internationalistic Antagonism; VI. The International Mind.
Dr. Case has given these lectures in Pasadena and elsewhere in Southern California. He is an authority along ethnological lines and his work in this connection has been recognized in several foreign lands, as well as in America. He spoke recently at Fullerton Junior College, giving the Com mencement Address, on the topic “Human Nature.”
C., in the I ransportation Building, Se\- ^er work jn or(jer to collect material
enth and Los Angeles Streets.
for her books on folk dancing, she has
'Miss Lyon will use during the course (jQne manner of things.. She went
exclusive charts and pictures procured by her personally in Europe, and another interesting feature planned is the exhibit and discussion of period headgear and millinery, showing the adaptation of period headdresses to modern equipments and variations of the mode.
at one time down to the Lower East Side of New York, living among the people, and collecting folk dances and manners, customs, and traditions at first hand, by actually seeing them as they occur in the old country.
Miss Burchenal has held several po-(CONTINUED ON PAGE FOUR)
I ATTEND Al TOMORROW’S PICNIC
Education Department Gives Steak Dinner at Topanga Canyon in Afternoon
Leaving for the wilds of Topanga Canyon tomorrow afternoon, the Education Department Summer Session Picnic invites all men students of the university to join a pleasant afternoon outing. Those wishing to go are asked to sign up in the office of the Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds, main lobby of the Administration Building, and to indicate whether or not they have cars. Automobiles will leave at two, three, and four o’clock tomorrow afternoon.
Among the day’s attractions will be a steak dinner. William J. Klopp, instructor in Education, guarantees that the steaq will be at least three inches thick.
Sociology Journal Offers
Important Contributions
M. C. Elmer, Charles Ellwood, and Ellsworth Fans Appear in U. S.
C. Department Publication; Changing Child Behavior by Direct Method Discussed by Clinic Experts
“Changing the Child’s Behavior by Direct Methods” is one of the most important articles in the July-August issue of the Journal of Applied Sociology which is just off the press. It is written by Dr. Phyllis Blanchard and Dr. Richard H. Paynter, two eminent psychologists, who have based their findings upon studies made in Los Angeles wrhile members of the staff of the Child Guidance clinic last year. Professor Charles A. EUw'ood who was a member of the Suuumer Session faculty at U. S. C. a year ago, discusses the increasing role which the group is playing in society. He points out the danger of group egoism and excessive group patriotism.
Dr. M. C. Elmer, Visiting Professor in Sociology this summer, writes on, “The Random Sample,” and indicates some weaknesses in the use of sampling as statistical measure. Dr. Ellsworth Fans of the University of Chicago, an° outstanding social psychologist of the country, analyzes “The Nature of Social Attitudes” and throw s new light upon this basic phase of human life. In an article entitled, “Child Labor Research,” Mr. Raymond G. Fuller of Boston explains the recent reaction against the proposed child labor amendment to the Constitution, and urges that all friends of the child study the facts regarding child labor in a more fundamental way than they have done heretofore. He feels that in the past there has been too little of research and too much propaganda regarding child labor.
SHOW ATTITUDE CHANGE Dr. and Mrs. Earle F. Young have collaborated in a description of a sudden change in the social attitudes of (CONTINUED ON b*AGE THREE)
TWO CORRECTIONS
The Trojan wishes to make two corrections in the article printed Friday dealing with visiting Professor J. Duncan Spaeth of Princeton and Dr. James Main Dixon, head of the Comparative Literature department. The name of John Duncan, Dt. Spaeth’s grandfather, was inadvertently printed as James Duncan, while the Duke of Ar-gyle was the classmate of Dr. Dixon's father, and not, as the article stated, of Dr. Duncan’s.
WATCH FOR APPOINTMENTS Those registered with the Appointment Office of the University are asked by Miss Edith Weir. Appointment Secretary, to watch the bulletin board of the office quite frequently. It is located in the Old College near the south entrance.